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September/October Group Read: Losing Julia by Jonathan Hull
I will be nominating The King's Mistress by Emma Campion because it looks like it would be a great story with a different type of point of view, and The Turtle Catcher by Nicole Helget because I really enjoy personal war stories...

1. The Last Kingdom by Bernard Cornwell, for the same reasons as the last nominations...I think people will really enjoy it and I think it is on a few people's tbr lists.
and
2. Godiva by Nerys Anne Jones, because it is not something I would usually read and I bought it recently. So, now I need some buddies to read it with.

The Constant Princess by Philippa Gregory because who doesn't love Tudor fiction? I read The Other Boleyn Girl a year and a half ago, and I enjoyed it immensely despite the fact I can't really remember too much about it. Mayhaps that's because I read most of it during a 30 hour trip from New York to Sydney. I do recall wanting to know more about Catherine of Aragon, though.

The Enchantress of Florence by Salman Rushdie Really I just think that this book sounds like it could be quite interesting and it also has an Eastern influence to it.

I am not sure of another one to suggest..

1/ A Thread of Grace by Mary Doria Russell
The rich fictional narrative is woven through the factual military maneuvers and political games at the end of WW II, sharing a little-known story of a group of Italian citizens that sheltered more than 40,000 Jews from grueling work camp executions. Rather than the bleak and hopeless feeling that might be expected, the novel has the opposite effect; it reminds us that just as there will always be war, crime, and death, so too will there be good people who selflessly sacrifice themselves to ease the suffering of others.
2/The Rice Mother by Rani Manicka
Nothing in Lakshmi's childhood, running carefree and barefoot on the sun-baked earth amid the coconut and mango trees of Ceylon, could have prepared her for what life was to bring her. At fourteen, she finds herself traded in marriage to a stranger across the ocean in the fascinating land of Malaysia. Duped into thinking her new husband is wealthy, she instead finds herself struggling to raise a family with a man too impractical to face reality and a world that is, by turns, unyielding and amazing, brutal and beautiful. Giving birth to a child every year until she is nineteen, Lakshmi becomes a formidable matriarch, determined to wrest from the world a better life for her daughters and sons and to face every new challenge with almost mythic strength.
Terri wrote: "Not getting as many nominations as last month."
That just means I get to pick arbitrarily. :P
That just means I get to pick arbitrarily. :P

Losing Julia
Push Not the River
Nikki wrote: "I will nominate the following because they have been on my list to read for awhile and they sound really good:
Losing Julia
Push Not the River"
Nikki, this is my favorite nomination post ever! Both of these are A-MAZ-ING books. :D
Losing Julia
Push Not the River"
Nikki, this is my favorite nomination post ever! Both of these are A-MAZ-ING books. :D

The Constant Princess sounds good too.
I wouldn't mind The Enchantress of Florence either since I've been wanting to read Rushdie but don't really know how to approach him.

Was quiet at first, but there's been a sudden dash as the deadline nears.

I'll second (third?) the Enchantress of Florence-- that sounds fantastic.

I know they didn't... I couldn't send invites out. :(
But no, I don't think that we'll do a re-vote. Most of the people who voted are the people who participate!
But no, I don't think that we'll do a re-vote. Most of the people who voted are the people who participate!



...as in, I seriously missed the voting? I don't know how I did that. Slipping in my old age, I guess.
Chris wrote: "Seriously?"
Sorry Chris... Invite thingy was broke. :(
But you'll like Losing Julia... I hope. Frank is awesome. :D
Sorry Chris... Invite thingy was broke. :(
But you'll like Losing Julia... I hope. Frank is awesome. :D

I can't think of a more uninteresting book to me than Losing Julia.
There! I said it.
When I saw it won, my first thought was. Oh crap, not another modern war story. And then I read the blurb on it and thought, Oh crap, and a romance/love story too! EGAD!
So there you are folks. Just putting that out there. Levelling up the Yin and yang on this book selection.
Peace out. :-)
LOL... I thought the same thing when I first saw it Terri. A friend of mine sent it to me on a whim for Christmas, and from the cover and the blurb, I was like "Umm... ok. Not really interested."
But then I got into a kind of funk and picked it up... and I was really surprised by it. I didn't think that I would like it at all, even though I DO like war stories, and it surprised me by how much I really DID like it.
But then I got into a kind of funk and picked it up... and I was really surprised by it. I didn't think that I would like it at all, even though I DO like war stories, and it surprised me by how much I really DID like it.

I am afraid, I am more into berserkers than tearjerkers.


Thank goodness :-) there is someone else.
Hopefully people will want to read this book... It's one that I really enjoyed, although I certainly understand thinking that it looks particularly uninteresting, because I thought the same thing before I read it. :P
Losing Julia would work for the following challenge tasks as well:
10.2 - Read about a war within the past 500 years.
15.6 - Read a HP Group Read.
20.3 - Read a HF with a woman's name in the title.
Of course nobody is required to read the group read book, but if you want to give it a try, there's some incentive. ;)
Losing Julia would work for the following challenge tasks as well:
10.2 - Read about a war within the past 500 years.
15.6 - Read a HP Group Read.
20.3 - Read a HF with a woman's name in the title.
Of course nobody is required to read the group read book, but if you want to give it a try, there's some incentive. ;)



http://product.half.ebay.com/Losing-J..."
Thanks! I'll take it into consideration.
Barbara wrote: "Read Losing Julia a few years ago. I was disappointed. It sounded better than it read."
I had no expectations when I read it. I probably would never have picked it on my own based on the cover. But I was surprised at how much I liked it, and how much I liked Frank.
I had no expectations when I read it. I probably would never have picked it on my own based on the cover. But I was surprised at how much I liked it, and how much I liked Frank.

When I buy online I usually use The Book Depository
http://www.bookdepository.com/ or
http://www.bookdepository.co.uk/?gcli...
If your buying from BD its best to look at the book your after on both sites (even though they are the same) as sometimes its cheaper on one than the other..
Its also free shipping!! :)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Widow of the South (other topics)Losing Julia (other topics)
My Name Is Red (other topics)
The Enchantress of Florence (other topics)
A Tale of Two Cities (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Orhan Pamuk (other topics)Rani Manicka (other topics)
Mary Doria Russell (other topics)
Salman Rushdie (other topics)
Orhan Pamuk (other topics)
More...
Go ahead and nominate two books you'd like to read with the group in Sept/Oct. Link to the title please, and give a short reason for your nomination. :)
I'll take noms until Friday August 27th, and then we shall vote!